102
102
Mar 13, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 102
favorite 0
quote 0
need to teach all religions. by the way i think all great books should be taught. it just seems crazy that the foundation of the greatest books ever and movies, you mentioned you wouldn't have "lord of the rings" or "narnia" or "the matrix." how can young americans get to age 25 or 30 doing business in south america or europe at a business meeting and someone says that kind of reminds me of david and goliath and the young american says who? it's embarrassing. >> roma i'm like a terrier. i'm pulling on your leg here. >> "the bible" series is an introduction to the great stories. even through the television. >> your program has a religious element. i don't nene rude. i'm on your side. moses brings down the ten commandments. they are the ten commandmens not the ten suggestions. they are about behavior. they are about law. in some sense the foundation of our entire legal system. i mean the old testament, the new testament i don't know how you can separate it out. i don't want to separate it out. that's what i'm sayin
need to teach all religions. by the way i think all great books should be taught. it just seems crazy that the foundation of the greatest books ever and movies, you mentioned you wouldn't have "lord of the rings" or "narnia" or "the matrix." how can young americans get to age 25 or 30 doing business in south america or europe at a business meeting and someone says that kind of reminds me of david and goliath and the young american says who? it's embarrassing....
128
128
Feb 13, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
when everyone feared there would be a ton of insider selling when the company got religion about going mobile, that was the moment to buy, not sell. the weakenest hans were gone and the knowledgeable people come into buy. same thing with raucus, the wi-fi company, after it broke the print, or the initial ipo price. ipos can be a great way to make money, but if you are not in the know, it he can be a treacherous path. remember, the big guys don't necessarily have you, the home gamer in mind. be aware and trust me, never buy in the aftermarket. for every winner there are ten losers, and please, please, please, don't be a sucker. stay with cramer. >>> dealing with ipos can be difficult and dangerous, because the prospect of instant gains so enticing. >> that was easy. >> before it can cloud your better judgment. everybody who got in on the aborted facebook deal knows too well, you need a consistent method so you don't get torn to pieces by something you don't understand. a deal you can't fathom or make heads or tails of. so here is your primer on an nizing hot and cold and safer from more
when everyone feared there would be a ton of insider selling when the company got religion about going mobile, that was the moment to buy, not sell. the weakenest hans were gone and the knowledgeable people come into buy. same thing with raucus, the wi-fi company, after it broke the print, or the initial ipo price. ipos can be a great way to make money, but if you are not in the know, it he can be a treacherous path. remember, the big guys don't necessarily have you, the home gamer in mind. be...
314
314
Mar 22, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 314
favorite 0
quote 0
today we found out from the "new york post" those firms true religion is trying to sell itself to might be getting out of the bidding. an unexpected leadership change is rarely a sign good things are happening. of course, not all unexpected ceo departures are negative. when a bad ceo gets the boot, see you later, that's always a good thing. hence why we have the "mad money" wall of shame to call out these incompetents. sometimes the boards need to see them on the wall of shame to get motivated. everybody already understands that things are going poorly. for example, the dog that is groupon roared after it announced its foolish founder and ceo andrew mason was being axed at the end of february. same thing happened to avon when wall of shamer andrea young was forced to resign as ceo last april and had to step down as chairman in october. what about when a good ceo leaves, or a great one? we never like losing a talented manager. it's always going to create additional uncertainty. as long as there is a succession plan in place, it shouldn't be that bad. it's certainly not a deal breaker tha
today we found out from the "new york post" those firms true religion is trying to sell itself to might be getting out of the bidding. an unexpected leadership change is rarely a sign good things are happening. of course, not all unexpected ceo departures are negative. when a bad ceo gets the boot, see you later, that's always a good thing. hence why we have the "mad money" wall of shame to call out these incompetents. sometimes the boards need to see them on the wall of...
131
131
Nov 21, 2013
11/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
but the religion of the anti-spending religion of the republicans has stopped this initiative from happening year after year. alternatively, now, i would have to wonder if the president, maybe he'd be able to cross the aisle, call for a one-time only corporate tax cut, the international money that's overseas. the overseas taxes and say cuts that to a rate at 10%. less than the current statutory rate to repatriate all the money our companies are keeping overseas to avoid a much larger tax bill. how about putting the tax proceeds, which could be as much as $1.5 trillion into a gigantic infrastructure bag. lever it up, 3 to 1. rebuild the roads, bridges, tunnels, you name it, we need to do it. it could be successful. that was a republican project created by ike eisenhower in the 1950s when he realized that only federal spending was big enough to solve the country's unemployment problem back then. private industry wasn't able or up to the task. sound familiar? now, the federal reserve can't create jobs per se. it can't help start the hiring unit, take care of some $4 trillion in identified infra
but the religion of the anti-spending religion of the republicans has stopped this initiative from happening year after year. alternatively, now, i would have to wonder if the president, maybe he'd be able to cross the aisle, call for a one-time only corporate tax cut, the international money that's overseas. the overseas taxes and say cuts that to a rate at 10%. less than the current statutory rate to repatriate all the money our companies are keeping overseas to avoid a much larger tax bill....
128
128
Jul 10, 2013
07/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 128
favorite 0
quote 0
they will never forget the americans that call for freedom, that call for separation of church and religion, that call for free democracy, supporting the fascist regime. >> we have to go, we're monitoring another major news event. we want to make sure we have you back as things develop there. thank you for joining us on the telephone, naguib. >>> the dual mandate is to pursue maximum employment and price stability. currently, we have an unemployment rate of 7.6%, which i think, if anything, overstates the health of our labor markets, given participation rates and many other indicators of underemployment and long-term employment. so we're not there, obviously, on the maximum employment part of the mandate. on price stability, inflation is now about 1%, which is below our 2% objective. so both sides of our mandate -- both the employment side and the inflation side -- are saying that we need to be more accommodative. moreover, the other portion of macroeconomic policy, fiscal policy, is now actually quite restrictive. cbo estimates that current federal fiscal policy is subtracting 1.5 percenta
they will never forget the americans that call for freedom, that call for separation of church and religion, that call for free democracy, supporting the fascist regime. >> we have to go, we're monitoring another major news event. we want to make sure we have you back as things develop there. thank you for joining us on the telephone, naguib. >>> the dual mandate is to pursue maximum employment and price stability. currently, we have an unemployment rate of 7.6%, which i think,...
95
95
Jun 14, 2013
06/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 95
favorite 0
quote 0
little instruments and spending hours and not interfacing with people, people who respect tradition, religion, spirituality, i think we need more of that in america today. >> yeah, but, bob, we all know tebow had a tough time with the jets, you know, last season. why do you think the patriots can fare better for him? >> well, we want high-quality people who work hard, are team players. i don't think there's a nicer person that i've ever met. and now, he'll get to compete with all the other people at the position, and our hope is that he's on our 53-man roster. >> well, we know when i was talking to people about this, about you coming on earlier, some of them said, look, the question is, you have tom brady, right? you've got your mvp. what role will tebow have? is there room for both tom brady and tebow? >> i think tom brady, we're privileged to have the best quarterback in the history of the game. but we're a physical game. injuries happen. we have a very -- another very good quarterback in ryan mallet, and we're allowed three quarterbacks. you know, we're in the business of quality depth man
little instruments and spending hours and not interfacing with people, people who respect tradition, religion, spirituality, i think we need more of that in america today. >> yeah, but, bob, we all know tebow had a tough time with the jets, you know, last season. why do you think the patriots can fare better for him? >> well, we want high-quality people who work hard, are team players. i don't think there's a nicer person that i've ever met. and now, he'll get to compete with all...
131
131
Sep 12, 2013
09/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 131
favorite 0
quote 0
there was a religion. he really -- he really did -- he was such a great advertising man. i think he was the greatest advertising man ever. >> and he didn't -- he wasn't out there a lot. he didn't do interviews a lot. how come he was such a great advertiser? >> great vision. great passion. he knew what he was doing. he introduced products. this new introduction was nothing like he would have done it. i'm sure it's a great product. it loses that magic. it's the magic that he gave to the company. you don't get it back. when he passed, there had to be a period of time people are just not used to him not being there. they're getting pressure from a lot of different places. >> and you've got so much competition. nipping at their heels. android, google taking market share. >> yeah. taking market share. you know, they've lost that luster, that magic. he looked invincible. he made them invincible. >> yeah. when you put together an ad, when you look at companies to try to highlight, what's most important in terms of touching people, in terms of really making that sale? >> you have
there was a religion. he really -- he really did -- he was such a great advertising man. i think he was the greatest advertising man ever. >> and he didn't -- he wasn't out there a lot. he didn't do interviews a lot. how come he was such a great advertiser? >> great vision. great passion. he knew what he was doing. he introduced products. this new introduction was nothing like he would have done it. i'm sure it's a great product. it loses that magic. it's the magic that he gave to...
181
181
Apr 12, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 181
favorite 0
quote 0
and i'm in favor of religion. so i'm there. i've never lived in pennsylvania. i just think we need a background check. let me move on because this is jared's favorite subject. we have this budget called the obama budget. and i'm a simple-minded guy. here's the way i look at the budget. this budget says no to the budget-cutting sequester and this budget says yes to a trillion-dollar tax hike. more spending, more taxing, anti-growth, this is where the republican party should say no compromise, we are out of here, we are not buying it. >> well, look, the sequester is just a terrible idea because of the across-the-board cuts. what the budget actually does is it generates the same savings you get from sequester, remember, there's $1.8 trillion in reduction over ten years in this budget. >> i love the sequester. >> it generates the same savings as the she sequester -- >> the day the sequester passed the stocks went up. >> i take your point about the trillion, the president talks about that, 580 billion, basically there are two budgets. the offer he made to boehner an
and i'm in favor of religion. so i'm there. i've never lived in pennsylvania. i just think we need a background check. let me move on because this is jared's favorite subject. we have this budget called the obama budget. and i'm a simple-minded guy. here's the way i look at the budget. this budget says no to the budget-cutting sequester and this budget says yes to a trillion-dollar tax hike. more spending, more taxing, anti-growth, this is where the republican party should say no compromise, we...
50
50
Apr 18, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 50
favorite 0
quote 0
a gathering of men and women of every race and every religion, every shape and every size, a multitude represented by all those flags that flew over the finish line. so whether folks come here to boston for just a day or they stay here for years, they leave with a piece of this town tucked firmly into their hearts. so boston's your hometown, but we claim it a little bit, too. i know this -- i know this because there's a piece of boston in me. you welcomed me as a young law student across the river. welcomed michelle, too. you welcomed me -- you welcomed me during a convention when i was still a state senator and very few people could pronounce my name right. like you, michelle and i have walked these streets. like you, we know these neighborhoods. and like you, in this moment of grief, we join you in saying, boston, you're my home. for millions of us what happened on monday is personal. it's personal. today our prayers are with the campbell family of medford. and they are here today. their daughter, krystle, was always smiling. those who knew her said that with her red hair and her fre
a gathering of men and women of every race and every religion, every shape and every size, a multitude represented by all those flags that flew over the finish line. so whether folks come here to boston for just a day or they stay here for years, they leave with a piece of this town tucked firmly into their hearts. so boston's your hometown, but we claim it a little bit, too. i know this -- i know this because there's a piece of boston in me. you welcomed me as a young law student across the...
120
120
Jul 22, 2013
07/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 120
favorite 0
quote 0
look, between the tax incentives, between the assistance, between the tax abatements on the religion estate, you can lever up, you said $1 billion, $900 something billion. >> exactly. >> in this east river plaza thing. in a place like detroit you can lever up many billions of dollars. jimmy kemp, i'll give you the last word. entrepreneurs will flock to it. you've got smart people in detroit and right around detroit. you've got medical complexes and science complexes. you can rebuild that place. it's a different idea, technology, for example. it's different than the old car manufacturing business, but people have to be willing to get their hands on these incentives. last word, jimmy kemp. >> i would just say that it's a shame that after 50 years of government trying to build detroit into a model city which started in 1961, that this is where we are. it's not free enterprise ideas that have put into place, and detroit is a model for the country, larry, you know this. we've got to have growth policies around the country, and we shouldn't need enterprise zones. we should have a tax syste
look, between the tax incentives, between the assistance, between the tax abatements on the religion estate, you can lever up, you said $1 billion, $900 something billion. >> exactly. >> in this east river plaza thing. in a place like detroit you can lever up many billions of dollars. jimmy kemp, i'll give you the last word. entrepreneurs will flock to it. you've got smart people in detroit and right around detroit. you've got medical complexes and science complexes. you can rebuild...
245
245
Feb 2, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 245
favorite 0
quote 0
to me religion freedom is different. it is just different. if you have a religious conscience you should be able to abide by it. the government should not be able to tell you otherwise. this is just a health care mandate. >> the government is not telling what you to do. >> they've created a right to employer provided contraception. you've created in the constitution, in the penumbra a new right to -- exactly. >> you've created that in your definition, your interpretation of it. but clearly what the obama administration is trying to do is to figure out a way to thread the needle here, to provide coverage for people and at the same time deal with the concerns of the religious organizations. the fact they continue to make compromises is an indication that they're trying to be flexible. >> well, not alienating its female base, which it tried to get all ginned up, isn't that basically what it is? the whole element of the democratic party, far left, hollywood, that just doesn't get the religious objection. they think it'ssaly. >> people do get the
to me religion freedom is different. it is just different. if you have a religious conscience you should be able to abide by it. the government should not be able to tell you otherwise. this is just a health care mandate. >> the government is not telling what you to do. >> they've created a right to employer provided contraception. you've created in the constitution, in the penumbra a new right to -- exactly. >> you've created that in your definition, your interpretation of...
62
62
Mar 12, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 62
favorite 0
quote 0
it was able to determine sexuality with 88% accuracy, race, political leanings with 85% accuracy and religion, 82% of the time. the study could also be making surprisingly accurate predictions about users' substance use, political views and whether their parents divorced as a child. get this, mandy, and this is true, very bizarrely, it showed that people who liked curly french fries had higher iqs, i was reading the analysis of this particular survey, and they couldn't even work out that correlation between liking curly fries and higher i want qs. i don't know. i like curly fries. >> i would like some right now. >>> herb is up nextic, with two ways to hedge your portfolio. >>> and which duds of the s&p could become the next studs, you know. a couple fund managers with their top picks, duds to studs, next. [ kitt ] you know what's impressive? a talking car. but i'll tell you what impresses me. a talking train. this ge locomotive can tell you exactly where it is, what it's carrying, while using less fuel. delivering whatever the world needs, when it needs it. ♪ after all, what's the point of
it was able to determine sexuality with 88% accuracy, race, political leanings with 85% accuracy and religion, 82% of the time. the study could also be making surprisingly accurate predictions about users' substance use, political views and whether their parents divorced as a child. get this, mandy, and this is true, very bizarrely, it showed that people who liked curly french fries had higher iqs, i was reading the analysis of this particular survey, and they couldn't even work out that...
202
202
Apr 19, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 202
favorite 0
quote 0
used it to kill soldiers for his own personal reasons, not necessarily anything that had to do with religion or politics. in this particular case, because perhaps the older brother was radicalized, had influence on the younger brother, who's the fugitive right now, we may find this is something like a timothy mcveigh. in essence, the target was not so specific, but the target was located because he wanted to have maximum impact and he wanted to get some type of media attention for the cause of the chechen people and their conflict with russia. and as timothy mcveigh told us after oklahoma city, when we said, but look at all the people who died and were injured, and of course, mcveigh said, collateral damage. and these individuals are the ones surviving may well say the same thing to us. >> clint, bill griffeth here in watertown. this tomorrow, radicalization, what in the world can you say to a young man to get him to commit such a horrific act that is so out of character from his life to this point? what is it that you tell that person that radicalizes them? >> well, part of it is going to b
used it to kill soldiers for his own personal reasons, not necessarily anything that had to do with religion or politics. in this particular case, because perhaps the older brother was radicalized, had influence on the younger brother, who's the fugitive right now, we may find this is something like a timothy mcveigh. in essence, the target was not so specific, but the target was located because he wanted to have maximum impact and he wanted to get some type of media attention for the cause of...
78
78
Sep 12, 2013
09/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 78
favorite 0
quote 0
before this every nation had been based on ethnicity, monarchies, religions, wars, etc. this was based on an idea based on religious freedom, political freedom and economic freedom. unique at the time in the world. inspired revolutions at the time. the french revolution, by the way, didn't go very well the first time around. that spread across europe because of us. >> charles, last one to you. a strong america makes for a safer world, okay? that's my view. that's the view of a lot of people. a strong america makes for a safer world. we have a strong america now? >> we have an america that's going through a tough time politically and economically. that is showing itself in terms of a turning inward in congress and among the american people. are we retreating? is this the beginning of a neoisolationism, i doubt it, but there's no question that there's a moment when we need others to help step up to the plate. unfortunately, i don't think that's what russia's doing. i think that they are trying to needle their way into this situation to protect their proxy, assad, who is ba
before this every nation had been based on ethnicity, monarchies, religions, wars, etc. this was based on an idea based on religious freedom, political freedom and economic freedom. unique at the time in the world. inspired revolutions at the time. the french revolution, by the way, didn't go very well the first time around. that spread across europe because of us. >> charles, last one to you. a strong america makes for a safer world, okay? that's my view. that's the view of a lot of...
145
145
May 6, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 145
favorite 0
quote 0
people in the pension world, it's become a mantra, a religion. >> are you saying there's a problem with corporate governance? >> it makes sense in government, maybe. look at the paralysis we had in government with separation of roles. we've had it since the greeks and the romans. montiscu said separation of roles is where it's at. what it's trying to do is limit effective decision making. krou don't want to run a risk of a government going out of business though it does seem it happens almost. in business you want to take that risk. einstein said ships are always safest when they're in port. that's not what they're built for. they're supposed to take risk. >> professor, i'm taking notes as fast as i can. >> all the way back into ancient greece and rome. thank you very much. >> very enlightning. >> thank you, guys. thanks, herb. >>> more high jinx in housing? new york attorney general planning to sue bank of america and wells fargo over mortgage foreclosure practices. wait till you hear what he says they're up to now. >> there will be a test after the jeff sonnenfeld segment. >>> exclusi
people in the pension world, it's become a mantra, a religion. >> are you saying there's a problem with corporate governance? >> it makes sense in government, maybe. look at the paralysis we had in government with separation of roles. we've had it since the greeks and the romans. montiscu said separation of roles is where it's at. what it's trying to do is limit effective decision making. krou don't want to run a risk of a government going out of business though it does seem it...
94
94
Mar 25, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 94
favorite 0
quote 0
it's true that some religions treat that, which may or may not be bigotry. >> this case is the fact that the equal protection clause will create a new class. >> that's the state of this country, and individuals have a right to be treated the same way as everybody else. and that is at the core of this debate. >> a tricky question. but it violates the equal protection clause. you have to create a new class of people. >> do we need more individual rights, or is this a question about marriage? those are two different -- they may be related, but they're two different things. >> that's a very important question. the question before the supreme court, regardless of who's changing their mind on it or whose loved one is gay. who among us doesn't have a loved one who's gay. that's a given. the question is whether the 14th amendment clause should create a new class of people? the supreme court hasn't done that in 30 years. >> it's about whether the equal protection clause protects people who have the right to marry. >> that's the same thing. >> no, you're framing it as a new class of people. >> it'
it's true that some religions treat that, which may or may not be bigotry. >> this case is the fact that the equal protection clause will create a new class. >> that's the state of this country, and individuals have a right to be treated the same way as everybody else. and that is at the core of this debate. >> a tricky question. but it violates the equal protection clause. you have to create a new class of people. >> do we need more individual rights, or is this a...
275
275
Jul 26, 2013
07/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 275
favorite 0
quote 0
he is one of the biggest spenders in the religion fund world. -- hedge fund world. >> that's a big point. the justice department did not charge companies for some time after it put arthur anderson out of business at enron. is that changing? >> well, it didn't charge them in the way that ended up in trials with felonies. what the government did and the department of justice did, would think about, could we come up with an alternative way to change the corporation's behavior while still keeping it alive, so the employees don't lose their jobs? is this a big difference? i mean, what they're doing is huge, but i don't know that it's going to change the way they approach these companies. this is a very special case. i think they analyzed whether there's alternative ways to get the resolution they want. >> i don't necessarily -- look, s.a.c. capital is not arthur anderson. if s.a.c. capital goes away, there's 1,000 jobs lost, and it doesn't -- when arthur anderson went away, it cut down on the amount of competition in that space. it was viewed as a policy disaster. i don't think s.a.c. capital
he is one of the biggest spenders in the religion fund world. -- hedge fund world. >> that's a big point. the justice department did not charge companies for some time after it put arthur anderson out of business at enron. is that changing? >> well, it didn't charge them in the way that ended up in trials with felonies. what the government did and the department of justice did, would think about, could we come up with an alternative way to change the corporation's behavior while...
118
118
Sep 18, 2013
09/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 118
favorite 0
quote 0
it's become a religion in washington and i'm sierra club, i was green peace, conservation. this is a sacred cow that could destroy our nation's best opportunity to become energy independent, create more jobs almost instantly. we have such a surfeit of natural gas that we are stopping drilling. it's almost as if we're trying to commit economic suicide. mark my words here, people, we're going to crucify our nation on a cross of renewables. it's insanity. >>> keep up with cramer all day long. follow @jimcramer on twitter and tweet your questions #madtweets. [ male announcer ] ok, here's the way the system works. let's say you pay your guy around 2% to manage your money. that's not much you think. except it's 2% every year. does that make a difference? search "cost of financial advisors" ouch. over time it really adds up. then go to e-trade and find out how much our advice costs. spoiler alert: it's low. really? yes, really. e-trade offers investment advice and guidance from dedicated, professional financial consultants. it's guidance on your terms, not ours. that's how our sys
it's become a religion in washington and i'm sierra club, i was green peace, conservation. this is a sacred cow that could destroy our nation's best opportunity to become energy independent, create more jobs almost instantly. we have such a surfeit of natural gas that we are stopping drilling. it's almost as if we're trying to commit economic suicide. mark my words here, people, we're going to crucify our nation on a cross of renewables. it's insanity. >>> keep up with cramer all day...
129
129
May 1, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
had those tight true religion jean shorts now become baggy? or are you like me and you hope for an across-the-board sale to occur? even as you know you're never going to get that lucky. how about all those assumptions about how stocks don't deserve to be high? what does that mean, deserve? is that because they have a grand jury somewhere that's like a federal judge of stocks? who's going to definitely put you under arrest and the buyers and you're going to be sentenced to doing a lot of community service for paying too much? is there some law, perhaps something in the constitution i don't know about that says you were mandated to avoid buying stocks and must buy bonds because they're intrinsically safer like the new bond commerce clause? i don't know. i don't know that law. i've never heard of the judge unless judge judy has started giving investment advice. how about i've got another idea. stock buy miranda warning. let's get really granular here. yesterday we had on pat doyle from domino's. we could look at his earnings report, look at the s
had those tight true religion jean shorts now become baggy? or are you like me and you hope for an across-the-board sale to occur? even as you know you're never going to get that lucky. how about all those assumptions about how stocks don't deserve to be high? what does that mean, deserve? is that because they have a grand jury somewhere that's like a federal judge of stocks? who's going to definitely put you under arrest and the buyers and you're going to be sentenced to doing a lot of...
119
119
Sep 17, 2013
09/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 1
it's become a religion in washington and i was green peace, conservation. this is a sacred cow that could destroy our nation's best opportunity to become energy independent, create more jobs almost instantly. we have a surplus of natural gas that we are stopping drilling. it's almost as if we're trying to commit economic suicide. mark my words here, people, they're going to crucify our nation on a cross of renewables. it's insanity. >>> keep up with cramer all day long. follow @jimcramer on twitter and tweet your questions #madtweets. ♪ [ male announcer ] some things are designed to draw crowds. others are designed to leave them behind. ♪ the all-new 2014 lexus is. it's your move. [ tires screech ] ♪ [ male announcer ] 1.21 gigawatts. today, that's easy. ge is revolutionizing power. supercharging turbines with advanced hardware and innovative software. using data predictively to help power entire cities. so the turbines of today... will power us all... into the future. ♪ but you had to leave rightce to now, would you go? world, into the future. man:
it's become a religion in washington and i was green peace, conservation. this is a sacred cow that could destroy our nation's best opportunity to become energy independent, create more jobs almost instantly. we have a surplus of natural gas that we are stopping drilling. it's almost as if we're trying to commit economic suicide. mark my words here, people, they're going to crucify our nation on a cross of renewables. it's insanity. >>> keep up with cramer all day long. follow...
119
119
Jul 30, 2013
07/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 119
favorite 0
quote 0
ecb and fed are meeting, the notion of who is in better shape relatively speaking will find some real religion in the foreign exchange markets. tyler, back to you. >> all right, rick, thank you very much. president obama gearing up for a major speech on the economy. in about 30 minutes time he's expected to offer republicans a grand bargain for middle class jobs involving corporate tax cuts. we will speak with one of the president's top economic advisers about whether this new offer will work or not. that and more when we return on "power lunch" at 1:33 eastern. if you're serious about taking your trading to a higher level, tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 then schwab is the place to trade. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 call 1-888-284-9410 or visit schwab.com/trading to tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 learn how you can earn up to 300 commission-free online trades tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 for six months with qualifying net deposits. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 see how easy and intuitive it is to use tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 our most powerful platform, streetsmart edge. tdd#: 1-800-345-2550 we put it in the cloud so you can use it on the web
ecb and fed are meeting, the notion of who is in better shape relatively speaking will find some real religion in the foreign exchange markets. tyler, back to you. >> all right, rick, thank you very much. president obama gearing up for a major speech on the economy. in about 30 minutes time he's expected to offer republicans a grand bargain for middle class jobs involving corporate tax cuts. we will speak with one of the president's top economic advisers about whether this new offer will...
263
263
Oct 3, 2013
10/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 263
favorite 0
quote 0
>> when you got religion you kind of -- you know, this is not what anybody else might call a logical discussion. >> that is true. we still have some time to go. right now we have the government shutdown which in historical peers we've had that before and the market has kind of managed to shake that off but you have that debt ceiling coming on fast and, of course, you have the specter of 2011 and 2011 you a bit of the same situation coupled with the crisis in the eurozone and one of the worst rolldowns in the market for a long time. >> do you think it will last for a long time or resolved quickly? >> i think if it's not resolved this week, next week could be quite different place for risk assets. >> maybe we'll ask you later what conditions need to be in place. right now we seem so far from any kind of resolution. claus vitiseen will be staying with us. ross. >> thanks for that, so we are here just an hour into the trading session, hour and ten minutes in europe and pretty even stevens much the advancers just about have it 5-4 at the moment and we're in sort of the middle of the tradi
>> when you got religion you kind of -- you know, this is not what anybody else might call a logical discussion. >> that is true. we still have some time to go. right now we have the government shutdown which in historical peers we've had that before and the market has kind of managed to shake that off but you have that debt ceiling coming on fast and, of course, you have the specter of 2011 and 2011 you a bit of the same situation coupled with the crisis in the eurozone and one of...
142
142
Dec 10, 2013
12/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 142
favorite 0
quote 0
news there's an interest from viewers to see news on subjects like culture, lifestyle, technology, religion, entertainment, sports, cuisine even. anthony bourdain's show. we want to make sure that we're covering all of the subjects that if you think about a magazine, think of all the subjects that you real about in your favorite magazine. they're all news. so we just want to make sure that we're not being reducktive or narrow in what news we cover. >> you happy with jeff zucker's performance? >> he's doing a very good job. great new talent at cnn. >> as always, very much apprecia appreciated. thank you for sitting down with. >> thanks for having me. >> you're welcome. the chairman and ceo of time warner. that time spin is still on track for the second quarter. >> yes. >> of next year because yesterday there was a little bit of not confusion but perhaps a story not correct out there. send it back to you guys. >> thank you very much, david faber. got big fuse in the auto sector. general motors announcing a new ceo. its first ever female. who is she? what will she bring to gm? and what's the r
news there's an interest from viewers to see news on subjects like culture, lifestyle, technology, religion, entertainment, sports, cuisine even. anthony bourdain's show. we want to make sure that we're covering all of the subjects that if you think about a magazine, think of all the subjects that you real about in your favorite magazine. they're all news. so we just want to make sure that we're not being reducktive or narrow in what news we cover. >> you happy with jeff zucker's...
182
182
Mar 27, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 182
favorite 0
quote 0
at some point when religion hits there could be a bigger stampede of capital the european leaders are really walking on thin ice here. when it comes to the recovery in europe, think if you had your money in a european bank. would you think i'm going to take a vacation, not worry about it? i don't think so. >> thank you so much, rick santelli. how good a change in leadership and a brand new game affect his future? [ male announcer ] this is a reason to look twice. the stunning lexus es. get great values on your favorite lexus models during the command performance sales event. this is the pursuit of perfection. during the command performance (announcer) scottrade knows our and invest their own way. with scottrade's smart text, i can quickly understand my charts, and spend more time trading. their quick trade bar lets my account follow me online so i can react in real-time. plus, my local scottrade office is there to help. because they know i don't trade like everybody. i trade like me. i'm with scottrade. (announcer) scottrade. voted "best investment services company." at a hertz expres
at some point when religion hits there could be a bigger stampede of capital the european leaders are really walking on thin ice here. when it comes to the recovery in europe, think if you had your money in a european bank. would you think i'm going to take a vacation, not worry about it? i don't think so. >> thank you so much, rick santelli. how good a change in leadership and a brand new game affect his future? [ male announcer ] this is a reason to look twice. the stunning lexus es....
121
121
Apr 22, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 121
favorite 0
quote 0
it's freedom of speech, religion, press. we don't want to discriminate against people in any way because of their religion. but when an institution gets going like the the jihadis coming into existence here in recent years, it starts with 9/11, though it was way before that, we have to pay attention to what they're saying to one another and what they're doing. you couldn't stop the burning of witches in salem in the 1690s just by paying attention to the people who were lighting the fires under the poor women being burned. you had to pay attention to everything going on in that society for it to be stopped. >> the mayor said these men acted alone. do you believe that? >> well, it depends on what you mean by alone. certainly they seem to have been inspired by people talking on the web and videos and the like as sort of the ways hassan, workplace violence told his fellow workers he was on jihad and killed fellow soldiers. they are not even given the people who were wounded at ft. hood the purple heart because they said it was j
it's freedom of speech, religion, press. we don't want to discriminate against people in any way because of their religion. but when an institution gets going like the the jihadis coming into existence here in recent years, it starts with 9/11, though it was way before that, we have to pay attention to what they're saying to one another and what they're doing. you couldn't stop the burning of witches in salem in the 1690s just by paying attention to the people who were lighting the fires under...
301
301
Dec 31, 2013
12/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 301
favorite 0
quote 0
get over to michelle caruso cabrera with today's executive edge which is at the cross-section of on religion and money. michelle. >> yes, it is. the big story on our website is whether or not the pope's recent comments about the wealthy and capitalism may be making it toughtory raise money for the $180 million restoration of st. patrick's cathedral. billionaire ken langone, he's spearheading the effort. he told us at least one potential seven-figure donor has expressed concerns about the pope's recent negative statements about the free market and suggestions that the wealthy may be insensitive to the poor. langone tells cnbc timothy dolean, quote, told the cardinal, your eminence, this is one more hurdle i hope we don't have to deal with. you want to be careful about general illustrates. rich people in one country don't act the same as rich people in another country. i sat down with cardinal dolean yesterday. but what the pope and the church believes about which economic model in the world is the best. here is what he said. >> look, the pope is the inheriter of a legacy of teaching. what's t
get over to michelle caruso cabrera with today's executive edge which is at the cross-section of on religion and money. michelle. >> yes, it is. the big story on our website is whether or not the pope's recent comments about the wealthy and capitalism may be making it toughtory raise money for the $180 million restoration of st. patrick's cathedral. billionaire ken langone, he's spearheading the effort. he told us at least one potential seven-figure donor has expressed concerns about the...
129
129
May 10, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 129
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> true religion. check that one out. the jeansmaker surging this morning. the news, agreeing taken public by tower brick cap it will for some $835 million. tower brook will pay 32 a share and that is about a 50% premium to the share price last october and that's when the company announced it was exploring strategic alternatives and it is subject to shareholder and regulatory approval, but expected to close in the third quarter. it has made investments in companies like jimmy choo, true religion also reported earnings in the latest quarter excluding costs associated with the review and earnings clocked in at 22 cents a share. sales rose 13% to 120.8 million. trlg up 7% rid now. david, back to you. >> thank you very much, josh lipton. >>> the course of business titan jamie dimon. take a look at "squawk box." jamie dimon is as gooda an executive if you searched high and low for however much time you wanted to and you landed on jamie dimon, you would do anything to have him take care of, let's call it, banking enterprise. i think he is as first rate as it gets.
. >> true religion. check that one out. the jeansmaker surging this morning. the news, agreeing taken public by tower brick cap it will for some $835 million. tower brook will pay 32 a share and that is about a 50% premium to the share price last october and that's when the company announced it was exploring strategic alternatives and it is subject to shareholder and regulatory approval, but expected to close in the third quarter. it has made investments in companies like jimmy choo, true...
343
343
Apr 1, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 343
favorite 0
quote 0
did you vary it immediately because it doesn't fit into your climbing on board of this whole secular religion? i mean, it helps the weather channel to have this variability. i know that, right? >> absolutely. >> you guys sell this like we sell dshg like we sell market volatility. this would be bad for you. >> if it's not really warming. what did you see, 33 degrees for baseball? >> 33 degrees for the first pitch at target field in minneapolis, right. >> have you, like, fouled off a pitch when it's 33 degrees? do you know what that feels like? >> you know how it feels, splitters around your forearm when you jar it? >> horrible feeling. >> yes, it is. >> almost as bad as listening to hans job in musical form. oh, my gosh. >> thank you, reynolds, for playing along. >> bye, guys. >> what happened to these guys? they went the way of the wiggles. >> they screw up and their voices change. >> i thought one of them splintered off. >> one of the hansons? >> they're still out there, i'm told. i mean, justin bieber is like a vacuum. he sucks all of the -- doesn't he? his underwear is always hanging out.
did you vary it immediately because it doesn't fit into your climbing on board of this whole secular religion? i mean, it helps the weather channel to have this variability. i know that, right? >> absolutely. >> you guys sell this like we sell dshg like we sell market volatility. this would be bad for you. >> if it's not really warming. what did you see, 33 degrees for baseball? >> 33 degrees for the first pitch at target field in minneapolis, right. >> have you,...
218
218
Jul 2, 2013
07/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 218
favorite 0
quote 0
i would say gold is like religion. you either believe or you don't believe. that's one of the things, gold is down because of three things that are up. interest rates are up. stock is up. the dollar is up, okay. also, gold basically rises. taught for 27 years at harvard and yale. other professors said there is no formula for gold. the t, the t is trust in central banksers. it has risen, because they say they will withdraw us from this overhyped monetary stimulus. finally, the inflation has basically is below their target. so you don't have that going for you. and their perceived tail risk. gold is like a store of value asset. it is not a capital asset whose price is driven by interest rate changes or a consumable of tradeable asset like oil or grain whose value is determined by supply and demand. gold is purely a function of what someone else is willing to pay you for it. you have written a wonderful book, adam, called the art and science of technical analysis, am i right? >> yes. >> what is something, owe eoi wrote a book once, i took it to my boss at morgan
i would say gold is like religion. you either believe or you don't believe. that's one of the things, gold is down because of three things that are up. interest rates are up. stock is up. the dollar is up, okay. also, gold basically rises. taught for 27 years at harvard and yale. other professors said there is no formula for gold. the t, the t is trust in central banksers. it has risen, because they say they will withdraw us from this overhyped monetary stimulus. finally, the inflation has...
217
217
Mar 7, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 217
favorite 0
quote 0
not companies, not government, not religion. the truth is you've got to let the best ideas win. the kids know what motivates them much more than we do. >> you recommend that families put together a mission statement. i mean, similar the way a company might put together a mission statement. what is that about? >> the first person who told me about this was jim collins. i interviewed jim collins. >> good to great. >> the defining management guru and he said all organizations that are successful do two things. they preserve the core, and they stimulate progress. this meeting system is very good for changing in realtime. but what about your core? here's an idea which is you go through this process of defining your values. and when i first heard this i thought it was kind of corny, maybe a little cold. but then someone asked me, can your kids actually say what values are most important to you. and i thought maybe they can guess it. but we went through this process. we had a pajama party, we made popcorn, we all piled into the bed, and we had this conversation, what's really important
not companies, not government, not religion. the truth is you've got to let the best ideas win. the kids know what motivates them much more than we do. >> you recommend that families put together a mission statement. i mean, similar the way a company might put together a mission statement. what is that about? >> the first person who told me about this was jim collins. i interviewed jim collins. >> good to great. >> the defining management guru and he said all...
136
136
Jun 3, 2013
06/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 136
favorite 0
quote 0
so they don't want necessarily the mixing of religion and the state and this prime minister, some of them dom plained imposing rules about drinking liquor, et cetera that they are upset with. >> there's a trend out there to many call this a turkish spring, but let's say what this is not. this is not for a call of a democracy because theyal ved it. this is not a call for improving the economy because that economy has been doing all right. it's about something more than this and it's certainly taken the government by surprise. thousands and thousands and thousands of people on the streets in the last four days. here's the yield on the ten-year. it's been rising which would suggest that people are concerned about the country's ability to pay back debt or at least the costs will go up. the turn irk lire has fallen two cents on the dollar. two cents is a big move in such a short period of time. watch and see how this plays out. right now the prime minister is taking a very harsh stand against the protester, carl. difficult pictures to look at every morning. michelle caruso-cabrera. >>> we
so they don't want necessarily the mixing of religion and the state and this prime minister, some of them dom plained imposing rules about drinking liquor, et cetera that they are upset with. >> there's a trend out there to many call this a turkish spring, but let's say what this is not. this is not for a call of a democracy because theyal ved it. this is not a call for improving the economy because that economy has been doing all right. it's about something more than this and it's...
288
288
Aug 5, 2013
08/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 288
favorite 0
quote 0
first of all, to throw gender or race or religion into this i think is shameful, a, b, maybe we need a non-canesian approach, within i think stimulus, why does have it to go from farmer to b? that is a huge prize indeed. that is a free parking of monumental levels. so why do we get into the psyche of investors and do it the old fashioned way and entice them to do what they want to do and have the government and the investors notions and strategies on the same road. >> you are right, though, that is what the fed has been trying to do is push that confidence and push them no those types of things, what itself the way to do it? >> i don't think the way to do it is say, okay, let me thinks, i'm down in the pools, let's do corporate reform, that's a buzz word, it ends up being re-arranging the deck cares on the horrible corporate tax titanic. then making it really an issue of spending. oi'll do it, but i want the money, i'd like to see real tax reform without 18 e any strings and in terms of the spending side, keep saying $2.6 trillion. that will do a lot of positive things for the econom
first of all, to throw gender or race or religion into this i think is shameful, a, b, maybe we need a non-canesian approach, within i think stimulus, why does have it to go from farmer to b? that is a huge prize indeed. that is a free parking of monumental levels. so why do we get into the psyche of investors and do it the old fashioned way and entice them to do what they want to do and have the government and the investors notions and strategies on the same road. >> you are right,...
141
141
Mar 8, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 141
favorite 0
quote 1
but then he got religion. geithner said, you're right. but bernanke got religion. people can change. you think pem can't change. you've always said that about me. >> that's true,ive do. yeah. and cutting out coffee. >> i think bernanke changed. i want to have faith in bernanke. i refuse to think he's a buffoon and mouth talking. i think he'll get us out a jam, and i like being the minority in that. >> now that you heard the jobs report, we asked you to tweet us the predictions for the february nonfarm payrolls. our staff combing through those many entries right now. they are searching for that winner. who is going to receive a post 9 first anniversary mug. that was autographed by the "squawk on the street" gang. yes, all of us. we'll announce the winner of the contest later in the show. >> good luck, buddy. i was 5,000 off. >> really? >> my guess was 241. but i think i'm ineligible. >> i was 199. >> i wanted it badly, though. >> go back for a second. this energy boom is really big. maybe because like we live in new york, we're not allowed to frac here. people are f
but then he got religion. geithner said, you're right. but bernanke got religion. people can change. you think pem can't change. you've always said that about me. >> that's true,ive do. yeah. and cutting out coffee. >> i think bernanke changed. i want to have faith in bernanke. i refuse to think he's a buffoon and mouth talking. i think he'll get us out a jam, and i like being the minority in that. >> now that you heard the jobs report, we asked you to tweet us the predictions...
431
431
Jan 21, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 431
favorite 0
quote 0
he made multiple references to god and to religion and apropos that right now, myrlie evers-williams, the widow of medgar evers, who was slain 50 years ago in 1963 is giving the benediction for these ceremonies, and this is only the second time, by the way, that a presidential inauguration has taken place on martin luther king day. the first time, don, was when you were there in the white house in 1997 for president clinton. let's listen to miss williams. >> let us act upon the meaning that everyone is included. may the inherent dignity and inalienable rights of every woman, man, boy, and girl be honored. may all your people, especially the least of these, flourish in our blessed nation. 150 years after the emancipation proclamation and 50 years after the march on washington, we celebrate the spirit of our ancestors, which has allowed us to move from a nation of unborn hopes and a history of disinfranchised votes to today's expression of a more perfect union. we ask, too, almighty, that where our paths seem blanketed by thorns of oppression and riddled by pangs of despair, we ask for
he made multiple references to god and to religion and apropos that right now, myrlie evers-williams, the widow of medgar evers, who was slain 50 years ago in 1963 is giving the benediction for these ceremonies, and this is only the second time, by the way, that a presidential inauguration has taken place on martin luther king day. the first time, don, was when you were there in the white house in 1997 for president clinton. let's listen to miss williams. >> let us act upon the meaning...
201
201
Dec 12, 2013
12/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 201
favorite 0
quote 1
it's in the religion. because of that you have a lot of people who think that this is the safe haven. when everything else falls, you go to gold. >> one thing greg says, he said it's not a u.s. sitwaugs. of course, it is a world -- it is a world commodity. so we can talk about what happens here. you know, so it's just -- >> i find it fascinating to listen to this conversation of rationalizing the falling gold after the fact. it would come as no surprise to us, to those of us that thought it was a bubble if not a ponzi scheme three years ago in the first place that was driven higher by an awful lot of hot air. >> i'll say this much about gold. i do think the global central banks everywhere will continue to buy gold. >> why is it going up? >> global central banks aren't the ones controlling the market. look at the etf, overall volumes of gold held by etfs. june 2009 lows which tells me the retail investor is out of gold. that's a big deal. i don't think people are going to run away from the gold market. i do
it's in the religion. because of that you have a lot of people who think that this is the safe haven. when everything else falls, you go to gold. >> one thing greg says, he said it's not a u.s. sitwaugs. of course, it is a world -- it is a world commodity. so we can talk about what happens here. you know, so it's just -- >> i find it fascinating to listen to this conversation of rationalizing the falling gold after the fact. it would come as no surprise to us, to those of us that...
96
96
Jun 24, 2013
06/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 96
favorite 0
quote 0
start to roll forward, whereas the eurodollar 90-day forward rate has to converge the libor or certain religion sets in a very much present value situation and that's the important part. marks either are going to be more correct in this correction turning into a reality or going to be wrong and it's convergence happens you're going to see big rallies. it doesn't dismiss the fact that everything moves because of the efficient market. we talk about technical levels in zones, thresholds and the more volatility, the more momentum. you had over a week to make money. you saw intraday trade down at 211, 212, it worked. next key level 239, once you hit it lowest yield settle 241. we need to watch this carefully. if momentum continues, most believe that 290 is going to be your key level because from 290 to 239 was a huge sell inall and august. they traded thinly. >> monday morning on cnbc, obama care continued to drive consolidation in the health care sector. tenet buying vanguard for $21 a share. the ceo of tenet trevor fetter will join us live why he's spending 1.75 billion. the math of retirement is
start to roll forward, whereas the eurodollar 90-day forward rate has to converge the libor or certain religion sets in a very much present value situation and that's the important part. marks either are going to be more correct in this correction turning into a reality or going to be wrong and it's convergence happens you're going to see big rallies. it doesn't dismiss the fact that everything moves because of the efficient market. we talk about technical levels in zones, thresholds and the...
199
199
May 23, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 199
favorite 0
quote 1
guys who can't stand public markets have true religion. i know there aren't a lot of positive signs this morning but this is the kind of deal that if the stock doesn't do anything for a while, people then say, you know what? to heck with this. i'm taking myself private. very important deal. >> seems like there's two stages. on the one hand, they stop giving you monthly sales guidance. if they're really sick of the market, they just leave all together. >> rule 21 has figured out the quarter better than any other company. >>> fasten your seatbelts. market is poised to get off to a rough start as futures go down. we got three companies going public today and we'll watch them all when we come back. ♪ [ cows moo ] [ sizzling ] more rain... [ thunder rumbles ] ♪ [ male announcer ] when the world moves... futures move first. learn futures from experienced pros with dedicated chats and daily live webinars. and trade with papermoney to test-drive the market. ♪ all on thinkorswim. from td ameritrade. >>> about 45 seconds to the opening bell. t
guys who can't stand public markets have true religion. i know there aren't a lot of positive signs this morning but this is the kind of deal that if the stock doesn't do anything for a while, people then say, you know what? to heck with this. i'm taking myself private. very important deal. >> seems like there's two stages. on the one hand, they stop giving you monthly sales guidance. if they're really sick of the market, they just leave all together. >> rule 21 has figured out the...
153
153
Jan 9, 2013
01/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 153
favorite 0
quote 0
growing at a relatively slow rate because we're a mature economy and too many people out there -- >> not religions, ngulatioregulh government policy -- >> it is but the world environment is too intense. >> what do you think, michael? >> there's truth and valid points. one thing is interesting, believing you will have a robust -- earnings will be driven by the consumers supposedly putting in double-digits growth in the next few months. byron hit good points, expecting things to come down. this cocktail being brewed up in washington. if you were a business leader and listened to these guys on calls, would you want to be drinking with what these guys are brewing? i don't know. i think they will be conservative. i don't think you will have a cap x driver behind uncertainty. there's a lot of wild cards. a ssymmetrical performance.ear it's a mixed bag and no conviction in the marketplace, so much contradictory information, some says things are better and things are worse. >> corporations have had it good in terms of profit margins, interest rates, ability to borrow. >> they're peeking. >> the only way t
growing at a relatively slow rate because we're a mature economy and too many people out there -- >> not religions, ngulatioregulh government policy -- >> it is but the world environment is too intense. >> what do you think, michael? >> there's truth and valid points. one thing is interesting, believing you will have a robust -- earnings will be driven by the consumers supposedly putting in double-digits growth in the next few months. byron hit good points, expecting...
193
193
Nov 11, 2013
11/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 193
favorite 0
quote 0
safeway is very well 1 run, a lot of times you see this great news and say, wow, i imagine they got religion, no, someone spoke to management and said we will make your life difficult. >> jan is if safeway. >> it's interesting. the activists, it's different in terms of record. they are driving that. >> they are. they put an an appeal. they are not as good as kroger the ceo we spoke to last week. >> wow, that's a great company. >> let's go over to carl on the floor. >> david, straight from the opening bell, commemorating veteran's day the superintendent of the u.s. military academy at west point. general, good morning to you. great to have you. >> great to be here. a long time. >> class of '75. >> yes. >> what are your thoughts on veteran's day. >> veteran's day is a special day. americans take time to commemorate veterans, remember their sacrifice, what they have done for our country. particularly over the last 12 years, we were driving up here in wall street and drove past the world trade center, all those memories started flashing back. we knew our life would be different. we commemorate a
safeway is very well 1 run, a lot of times you see this great news and say, wow, i imagine they got religion, no, someone spoke to management and said we will make your life difficult. >> jan is if safeway. >> it's interesting. the activists, it's different in terms of record. they are driving that. >> they are. they put an an appeal. they are not as good as kroger the ceo we spoke to last week. >> wow, that's a great company. >> let's go over to carl on the floor....
211
211
Mar 20, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 211
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> real estate company just out -- >> going against the religion, get in trouble with who? the "new york times." go ahead. >> just out with the winter 2013 rent versus buy report. it says buying a home in the top 100 major metropolitan areas is cheaper despite rising home prices. joining us now from san francisco with more on the results, the chief economist. jet, am i getting your last name right on that? >> yes, you are, good morning. >> so, i was actually surprised by this. because i thought it was the opposite way around still. you would buy of the 100 metropolitan cities, would you buy everywhere? >> right now it's cheaper to buy than to rent in all of the 100 largest markets. when you take into account all of the costs and proceeds of both owning and renting. >> how are you making this calculation? what's the time horizon? there's got to be other things decides what it means from one year to one year. >> yeah, there's a lot going on under the hood. we're assuming you stay in your home for seven years, which has been the typical length of time that americans stay in a
. >> real estate company just out -- >> going against the religion, get in trouble with who? the "new york times." go ahead. >> just out with the winter 2013 rent versus buy report. it says buying a home in the top 100 major metropolitan areas is cheaper despite rising home prices. joining us now from san francisco with more on the results, the chief economist. jet, am i getting your last name right on that? >> yes, you are, good morning. >> so, i was...
183
183
Apr 29, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 183
favorite 0
quote 0
the banks still really don't have religion on expense cuts and they've got to cut expenses. you see the ten-year today at 166, that's going to benefit mortgage banking and is going to put huge weight on the profitability of the portfolios. >> after gdp on friday it's hard to imagine the yields going haver far very fast. paul, good to see you again. thanks. >> you're welcome. >> paul miller at fbr. >>> it has been six months since super storm sandy devastated the jersey shore and some of those areas are still not fully restored. we will go live to seaside heights next to see what this means for the summer tourism season. >>> later on, the story behind this picture. mashables editor in chief gives us a firsthand look at google glass right here on post 9 when we come back. >>> take a look at utilities today. the far right side of that chart is pretty amazing. a five-year high in each of the past seven sessions. the utilities have just refused to give up. the nasdaq as well. 12 1/2-year intraday high as the comp continues to set new levels as long as it's anywhere in that neighb
the banks still really don't have religion on expense cuts and they've got to cut expenses. you see the ten-year today at 166, that's going to benefit mortgage banking and is going to put huge weight on the profitability of the portfolios. >> after gdp on friday it's hard to imagine the yields going haver far very fast. paul, good to see you again. thanks. >> you're welcome. >> paul miller at fbr. >>> it has been six months since super storm sandy devastated the...
216
216
Dec 12, 2013
12/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 216
favorite 0
quote 0
did he learn religion after his problems or something? i don't know. it's very strange. it's all about egalitarian outcome. >> did you just -- the pope? >> i did. because yesterday you kept -- you know, he consistently will take that point of view from -- if someone barbs capitalism, you'll bring it up. >> we're a business network and i was trying to relate this time story magazine -- >> we were questioning the basic tennance of capitalism. he's the pope. he has to worry about the poor. that's what the pope does. hopefully they're not worried about rich people. of course, they need to get -- it's harder to get through the eye of a camel than -- >> yes, yes. >> but he didn't mean eye of a camel. my point was tapering looks like it's coming sooner or later. so all of these things that we've been talking about, the end game is in sight. this would be -- you know, the market goes up, not knowing if anything of this is really going happen. then when you see that it's becoming reality, then everybody says, hey, i've always acted. >> yeah. typically, yeah. it doesn't seem like
did he learn religion after his problems or something? i don't know. it's very strange. it's all about egalitarian outcome. >> did you just -- the pope? >> i did. because yesterday you kept -- you know, he consistently will take that point of view from -- if someone barbs capitalism, you'll bring it up. >> we're a business network and i was trying to relate this time story magazine -- >> we were questioning the basic tennance of capitalism. he's the pope. he has to worry...
172
172
Aug 22, 2013
08/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 172
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> freedom from minority religions. those were of major concern. the big concern for the egyptians is they want more democracy. they want more jobs. the part of the problem that the brotherhood has, it didn't create a lot of jobs. so the average egyptian feels unempowered. >> we focus so much on the vote. it is my understanding of the military, we don't know how much do they control of the economy? >> they control a lot of the economy. >> more than half? >> i would say the conventional number is 40%. it could be considerably higher. i have a major role on the economy. no question about it. >> so you have a problem with economic freedom as well? >> the economic freedoms are not of the military control, of the economy, for the average egyptian, low income egyptian, who is pretty well ed kated. they don't have opportunity. the way tunisia and egypt. >> were all about the economy, absolutely. >> and giving people opportunities. if this government will give people jobs that, will help stability and in turn military sfaeblt will create investment. >> we
. >> freedom from minority religions. those were of major concern. the big concern for the egyptians is they want more democracy. they want more jobs. the part of the problem that the brotherhood has, it didn't create a lot of jobs. so the average egyptian feels unempowered. >> we focus so much on the vote. it is my understanding of the military, we don't know how much do they control of the economy? >> they control a lot of the economy. >> more than half? >> i...
139
139
Feb 1, 2013
02/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 139
favorite 0
quote 0
has mom and pop really got religion now? >> i think the answer to that is no. january is seasonally a very good month, as halls been with the year-end reinvestment and pension contributions, has been a very good month for mutual funds. it's better than it was in the summer and autumn and winter. just last year. and so it's not the big pop that one would think you'd get. i, for one, think that's good. you know, when mutual fund investors pile into equities, it's usually a very negative sign for the market. so something like the dow going 14,000, i can contain my enthusiasm about that. it doesn't mean very much. >> and a lot of people have pointed out some of the records that we broke this month -- or i should say january, sort of were a reminder of the last time we set those records, which not too happy days were soon to follow, jack. >> well, yeah, you're right about that. it's even more dramatic if you go beyond the dow which has its advantages, and great limits. you go to the nasdaq, and that index is around 4,700 at its high in 2000. and now it's -- you tell
has mom and pop really got religion now? >> i think the answer to that is no. january is seasonally a very good month, as halls been with the year-end reinvestment and pension contributions, has been a very good month for mutual funds. it's better than it was in the summer and autumn and winter. just last year. and so it's not the big pop that one would think you'd get. i, for one, think that's good. you know, when mutual fund investors pile into equities, it's usually a very negative...
148
148
Apr 19, 2013
04/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 148
favorite 0
quote 0
anything that's out of the ordinary, even if it involves people of their own ethnic group and their own religion and their own persuasion. if they see something report it because it will come out of these local communities. >> i think there should be more direction on that. i think if more funding is necessary, absolutely, and they worry too much about political correctness and we have to get the message out and we also, though, i think, have to be telling local police and if we have to provide more funding at the federal level for them to build up their own intelligence unit and not just rely on the federal government and that's at the federal level. >> congressman? >> yes. our latest intel from nbc news is that attorney general eric holder and fbi director robert mueller were on the way to the white house to brief the president on everything they know thus far. none of us, obviously, are in that room, but what would you anticipate the next steps from washington is controlled on the ground by local police? >> the fbi is monitoring it all and the fbi is working with the local police. i think the
anything that's out of the ordinary, even if it involves people of their own ethnic group and their own religion and their own persuasion. if they see something report it because it will come out of these local communities. >> i think there should be more direction on that. i think if more funding is necessary, absolutely, and they worry too much about political correctness and we have to get the message out and we also, though, i think, have to be telling local police and if we have to...
212
212
Mar 1, 2013
03/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 212
favorite 0
quote 0
to leave the party to come into the 21st century, even if you say they're gone, the ones clinging to religion and guns, there is a core saying you got what you wanted once. don't bring it back. >> i think it's the lowest stake for them to go over. it's just 85 billion in cuts. boehner needed to say i'm not negotiating with obama and no tax hikes. >> in the woodward controversy, i was reading what the new yorker says that woodward through an interception or something like that. but i did read that initially they say woodward was right on the first account, that the president had, in fact, suggested the sequester. but on the second point he said there weren't supposed to be revenues included, that the president said it was always going to be a balanced plan. but that was before the fiscal cliff. you got your balance. where was the spending cuts on the fiscal cliff deal? now you say, object, give us something and it's like, no, we're going back to -- >> the point is, obama wants $1.332 trillion in tax increases. >> and the inside basis is not woodward at all. the fact that we're sitting here on
to leave the party to come into the 21st century, even if you say they're gone, the ones clinging to religion and guns, there is a core saying you got what you wanted once. don't bring it back. >> i think it's the lowest stake for them to go over. it's just 85 billion in cuts. boehner needed to say i'm not negotiating with obama and no tax hikes. >> in the woodward controversy, i was reading what the new yorker says that woodward through an interception or something like that. but i...
152
152
May 17, 2013
05/13
by
CNBC
tv
eye 152
favorite 0
quote 0
what is it that causes it to be such a zealous -- almost secular religion with these people? >> i think they are already revisiting the models. many are saying probably overestimating numbers. many numbers in the models. the models are extremely complicated. you have the sun. you have the cooling. >> water vapor. >> complicated. >> sit a product of the hydrocarbon. >> when people talk about the increase in ocean levels, in alaska. >> receding glaciers. >> which receded prior to 1900. >> how do you explain that? do you write that off? as a spectator here, this is what i see. this is what i read. i need to understand what to think of it. you're telling me to think of it differently than the way it's being portrayed? >> you should make a trip to glacier bay. the glaciers there are all gone. they disappeared in the 1800s. and in fact, that was one of the most famous trips. he pointed out all the glaciers were gone. that was long before there was any increase of co2. >> basically, to summarize, the stat that we keep seeing, 90% of climate scientists, they're wrong. and we should d
what is it that causes it to be such a zealous -- almost secular religion with these people? >> i think they are already revisiting the models. many are saying probably overestimating numbers. many numbers in the models. the models are extremely complicated. you have the sun. you have the cooling. >> water vapor. >> complicated. >> sit a product of the hydrocarbon. >> when people talk about the increase in ocean levels, in alaska. >> receding glaciers....